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  • EN
  • New computer vision method helps speed up screening of electronic materials
  • The world's oldest wine discoveredFE

  • Size of salty snack influences eating behavior that determines amount consumed
  • GA
  • Preconception stress may affect health of women undergoing fertility treatment
  • GRHoney added to yogurt supports probiotic cultures for digestive health

  • Study finds school entry requirements linked to increased HPV vaccination rates
  • HA

  • AI-controlled stations can charge electric cars at a personal price
  • New study maps dramatic 100-million-year explosion in color signals used by animals
  • ID
  • New 3D-printing method makes printing objects more affordable and eco-friendly
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  • Carbon dioxide's heavy stamp on temperature: Doubling CO2 may mean 7 to 14 degree increase
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  • YR

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  • Lit Hub Daily: October 10, 2024
  • One great short story to read today: Ling Ma’s “Office Hours”
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  • Lit Hub Weekly: April 22 – April 26, 2024
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  • Lit Hub Daily: August 22, 2024
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  • Emily Raboteau and Sarah Viren on Climate Change, Birding, and Social Justice
  • Lit Hub Daily: July 25, 2024
  • Lit Hub Daily: November 8, 2024
  • Lit Hub Daily: October 29, 2024
  • Swift River
  • Chaos Is My Co-Pilot: In Praise of Tumultuous, Unruly Storytelling
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  • Signs, Symbols, and Omens: A Reading List of Books Featuring Superstitions
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  • Jeff VanderMeer! Ben Okri! Peter Singer talks turkey! 24 new books out today.
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  • Regina Porter! Kafka! True crime with eels! 26 new books out today.
  • Mourning in a Time of Global Grief
  • Here are Libro’s bestselling audiobooks of 2024.
  • In light of SPD’s implosion, the Poetry Foundation announces a small press fund.
  • One great short story to read today: Leone Ross’s “The Woman Who Lived in a Restaurant”
  • My Name Is Sita
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  • “A Valentine to the Intoxicating Nostalgia of High School.” Joyce Carol Oates on Writing Broke Heart Blues
  • Unsolvable Puzzles: Anna Shechtman on the Feminist Psychology Behind Crosswords
  • A Rare Sacred Novel: Tommy Orange on the Genius of Leslie Marmon Silko’s Ceremony
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  • Lit Hub Asks: 5 Authors, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers
  • Here’s the shortlist for the 2024 Baillie Gifford Prize for Nonfiction.
  • Lit Hub Weekly: November 4 – 8, 2024
  • Lit Hub Daily: November 27, 2024
  • Nonfiction
  • Read Weird Books!: This Week on the Lit Hub Podcast
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  • What’s worth more than the rarest book in American literature? The answer may (not) surprise you.
  • How a Train is Like a Novel: On the Phenomenon of Illusory Self-Motion
  • The Emperor
  • The (Unwanted) Sex Lives of Married Women: Seven Books About Complicated Desire
  • Ann Patchett on Annotating Her Award-Winning Novel Bel Canto Twenty Years Later
  • Lit Hub Weekly: August 5 – 9, 2024
  • Ixelles
  • Here are the 2024 recipients of the $50k Academy of American Poets Fellowship prize.
  • Roe, Dobbs, and Reproductive Justice Lit: A Reading List for Abortion Advocacy
  • I Could Have Been Harsher: Lauren Oyler on Judging and Being Judged
  • Lit Hub Daily: July 9, 2024
  • True Crime and Transcendentalists: When Designing a Book Cover Takes You on a Long Strange Trip
  • Lit Hub Daily: July 18, 2024
  • Is Google Preparing to Let You Run Linux Apps on Android, Just like ChromeOS?
  • Attention: Soon you’ll be able to do a writing residency in Ursula Le Guin’s home.
  • Why is March 2024 the Best Month in Years For Books?
  • The Special Challenges of Attempting a New Translation of Kafka
  • Lit Hub Daily: May 21, 2024
  • Reckoning and Refoundation: How the Tokyo Trials Created Modern Asia
  • Grab your tickets for Freedom to Write for Palestine.
  • But Can It Change Anything? What Artists and Social Movements Can Learn From Each Other
  • A Different Kind of Dad Book: Lucas Mann on Fatherhood, Writing, and the Essay as an Act of Care
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  • “Ariadne Sends a Message,” a Poem by Margaret Atwood
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  • All the times Sally Rooney was saner than Book Media.
  • Genre Euphoria: Why More Poets Should Read (and Write) Romance Fiction
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  • The Seers
  • Solving the Mystery of the Dancing Honey Bees
  • Lit Hub Weekly: July 29 – August 2, 2024
  • How Translating a Novel About Emily Dickinson Got Rhonda Mullins Through the Pandemic
  • Here are the winners of the 2024 Hugo Awards.
  • Morgan Talty on Rejecting “Exoticized Foreknowledge”
  • New Linux Version of Ransomware Targets VMware ESXi
  • Gabriele Pedullà on Reconsidering Machiavelli
  • When Your Childhood Belongs to Everyone: Growing Up in a Downtown Manhattan That Changed Forever on 9/11
  • Lorrie Moore! Drew Gilpin Faust! Gay lit galore! 27 books out in paperback this May.
  • Hero of a Cult of One: On Loving Cormac McCarthy’s Early Work
  • How Corporations Tried—And Failed—To Control the Spread of Content Online
  • Lit Hub Daily: August 26, 2024
  • Lit Hub Daily: January 8, 2024
  • Conversations with the Long-Dead: My Literary Friendship with Margaret Cavendish
  • Why Voting in The Oscars (and in Politics) Is Broken, and How to Fix Both
  • Lit Hub Daily: April 3, 2024
  • 5 Book Review to Read This Weeks
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  • Ask Me Again
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  • What Writing TV Soap Operas Taught Me About Writing Novels
  • Where There’s Smoke… How Wildfires Across North America Are Making Children Sick
  • The Indian government is planning to prosecute Arundhati Roy.
  • Camp Over Tragedy: On Henry Van Dyke’s Farcical, Irreverent Novel of Black Gay Life in Mid-Century America
  • A Feminist Oral History of the 1972 Democratic National Convention
  • Lit Hub Asks: 5 Authors, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers
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  • The Literary Power of Hobbits: How JRR Tolkien Shaped Modern Fantasy
  • Linux Creator Torvalds Says Rust Adoption in Kernel Lags Expectations
  • Fire, Earth, Spring: Unity and Resistance in the Lands of SWANA
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  • Blood on the Brain
  • This Week on the Lit Hub Podcast: Borne Back Ceaselessly Into The Gatz
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  • Lit Hub Weekly: June 3 – 7, 2024
  • Prairie Edge
  • Lit Hub Daily: January 26, 2024
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  • Lit Hub Daily: January 31, 2024
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  • A Brief Literary History of the Murder Ballad, in Honor of Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter
  • Mary Bennet is getting her own show.
  • Lit Hub Daily: April 24, 2024
  • In Search of a Rare Queer Voice: Hannah Levene on Butch Lesbian Literature
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  • Honey
  • Margaret Atwood! Anne Carson! Robot writers! 24 new books out today.
  • Lit Hub Weekly: June 17 – 21, 2024
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  • Lit Hub Daily: September 16, 2024
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  • Here are the winners of the 2024 Women’s Prizes.
  • Lit Hub Weekly: April 1 – April 5, 2024
  • “How To Get Along Without Me”
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  • Eve and Joan: Exploring the Tumultuous Friendship of LA’s Literary Ladies
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  • Lit Hub Daily: October 8, 2024
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  • Worry
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  • Shop with solidarity at these unionized (and unionizing) stores and publishers.
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  • Lit Hub Daily: March 29, 2024
  • One great short story to read today: Ghassan Kanafani’s “Letter from Gaza”
  • Lit Hub Daily: January 12, 2024
  • So long, #SmutWeek. Time to celebrate pious fiction with #NunDay.
  • Held
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  • Lit Hub Weekly: December 18-22, 2023
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  • Lit Hub Daily: June 17, 2024
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  • Scott Guild on Trying to Read Finnegans Wake While on Tour With Your Band
  • Lit Hub Daily: February 7, 2024
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  • Lit Hub Daily: March 14, 2024
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  • Diverting Diversions: Mark Haber on Distractions, Literary Digressions, and the Possibilities of Fiction
  • Eternal Solace: Eve J. Chung on Tradition, Family and Mourning in Taiwan
  • One great short story to read today: Kevin Barry’s “Finistère”
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  • Clean
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  • This veep likes books! Governor Tim Walz put a Little Free Library in the Minnesota capitol.
  • Encounters with the Local Possum; Or, How Safety Can Hide Wonder from Us
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  • New York cults! Lawrence of Arabia! 18 new books out today.
  • Lit Hub Daily: January 22, 2024
  • On Illness and Death as Text and Autocorrect
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  • More Guns, More Money: How America Turned Weapons Into a Consumer Commodity
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  • The Red Grove
  • R. O. Kwon! Kent Wascom! Joyce Carol Oates! 25 new books out today.
  • Banned Books and Rooneymania: This Week on the Lit Hub Podcast
  • About Uncle
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  • The 11 Best Book Covers of April
  • Lit Hub Daily: November 29, 2023
  • Amitava Kumar on Denis Johnson’s Train Dreams
  • How to pick the perfect book to read on a plane.
  • Two Authors, One Subject: Zoë Eisenberg and Rhaina Cohen on Writing Intimate Friendships
  • Palestinian-American writer Randa Jarrar was dragged out of a PEN event.
  • A bunch of fake Kathleen Hanna biographies were released on the same day as her new memoir.
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • Rejecting Denial and Embracing Sorrow: On Writing the Story of a Husband’s Suicide
  • Rosie Schaap on Losing Her Husband: “He Wanted to Go on Reading Because He Wanted to Go on Living.”
  • “Aromatic Herbs”
  • How Cells’ Complex Choreography Sustains—and Ends—Human Life
  • Tracy Chevalier on Finding the Flow State
  • Here are the bookies’ odds for the 2023 Nobel Prize in Literature.
  • Finding the Strangeness in the Everyday: A Conversation With Srikanth Reddy
  • Julia Alvarez on Mortality
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • Read the Winners of American Short Fiction’s 2024 Insider Prize
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  • Stop Making Excuses: Why There’s Always Time to Follow Your Writing Dreams
  • Stacey D’Erasmo on Why We Keep Making Art
  • Victim
  • The Poetry of Chinese Names
  • Susan Murphy Roshi on Earth as Koan
  • Lit Hub Daily: June 13, 2024
  • Jonny Diamond on His Mother and Alice Munro
  • Leslie Jamison and Emmeline Clein on Words That Cut
  • Collaboration, Not Competition: How Betty Smith Helped Her Fellow Writers
  • Romance In the White House: What George Washington Wrote To His Wife
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  • Dust, Desolation, and Awe: Rebecca Boyle on Would It Be Like to Return to the Moon
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • John Vaillant on Winning the 2023 Baillie Gifford Prize
  • A Gesture Larger Than Death: On Bill T. Jones’s AIDS Elegy “Still/Here” at 30
  • Andrea Long Chu on Liking and Hating
  • Penance
  • Lissa Soep on Other People’s Words
  • Margot Livesey on Thomas Hardy’s Mistakes
  • Read a poem written by America’s best young poets.
  • Mother Doll
  • “DOE PROBLEMS,” a Poem by Kevin Latimer
  • What Freedom and Play Can Teach Us About the Way We Experience Cities
  • Lit Hub Daily: April 19, 2024
  • Brat
  • Anita Felicelli on Crafting a Collection of Existential Speculative Short Stories
  • A Vicious Cycle: Jessica Strawser on Telling and Re-Telling Traumatic Stories
  • Mako Yoshikawa on How Making Sushi Can Improve Your Writing
  • Chronicles of a Village
  • Philosopher of Change: How Henri Bergson’s Radical View of Reality Came to Be
  • How Did Phrenology Get So Popular in Victorian Society?
  • Rebecca Solnit: Slow Change Can Be Radical Change
  • Sounds, Signs, and Elegies: Seven New Poetry Collections to Read This September
  • Oh, Barry! President Obama has released his annual summer reading list.
  • The house from Practical Magic has inspired an architectural design trend.
  • “I now lack the juice to fuel the bluster to conceal that I am a simpleton.” Padgett Powell, Legend
  • AMD Core Performance Boost For Linux Getting Per-CPU Core Controls
  • Lit Hub Daily: February 21, 2024
  • The Great State of West Florida
  • Kate Reading on Becoming All the Characters
  • AudioFile’s Best Audiobooks of November
  • Claire Jiménez has won the 2024 PEN/Faulkner Award for What Happened to Ruthy Ramirez.
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Lit Hub Daily: September 12, 2024
  • Lit Hub Daily: March 1, 2024
  • Lit Hub Weekly: October 7 – October 11, 2024
  • Between Renewal and Gentrification: What the High Line Reveals About Manhattan
  • Support One Moment, Racism the Next: On Being a Black Nigerian Man in America
  • Susan Kiyo Ito on the Raw Truth of Exposure
  • Lit Hub Daily: March 13, 2024
  • Kyle MacLachlan Keeps Himself Open
  • Breaking English Open: On Privileging Sound Over Sense
  • Lit Hub Weekly: October 14 – 18, 2024
  • Modern Gun Ownership is Just Another Consumer Fantasy About Empowerment
  • The Unicorn Woman
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  • The Yinzers of Glasgow: On the Scottish Origins of Pittsburgh’s Unique Dialect
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  • Lit Hub Asks: 5 Authors, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers
  • On America’s Two-Party System… And the Damage It Has Done
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  • The Revolutionary Stranger: How Frantz Fanon Put Theory Into Practice
  • I Do NOT Want to Hang Out With My Fans: Am I the Literary Asshole?
  • Sister Deborah
  • Lit Hub Daily: January 25, 2024
  • Christopher Chen on Jorge Luis Borges’s “Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius”
  • Style As Survival: On Writing After Death
  • The Lights Don’t Just Go Out: A Lifelong Fainter on How Fiction Gets Fainting All Wrong
  • Internal Emails Reveal Columbia’s “Task Force on Antisemitism” is Causing Ruptures in Its Faculty.
  • Karen Tei Yamashita on Seeking Stories in the Soil
  • Indie Booksellers and Lying Liars: This Week on the Lit Hub Podcast
  • From Board Books to Middle Grade: 10 Great New Children’s Books Out in January
  • There Are Too Many Books; Or, Publishing Shouldn’t Be All About Quantity
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  • AudioFile’s Best Audiobooks of April
  • Lit Hub Daily: April 30, 2024
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • Dave Barry is a Florida Man
  • Lit Hub Daily: September 9, 2024
  • Avian Teachers: On What We Can Learn from Birds
  • More than a third of translators think they’ve already lost work to AI.
  • Reading Jill Ciment’s Consent As a Former Teenage Bride
  • Sasha Vasilyuk on the Price of Secrecy in Russia and Ukraine
  • An Ode to Acknowledgements
  • Olivia Laing on the Care and Keeping of Gardens In an Era of Climate Emergency
  • What the closure of Small Press Distribution means for readers.
  • February’s Best Reviewed Nonfiction
  • Red Hat's RHEL-Based In-Vehicle OS Attains Milestone Safety Certification
  • The Moment When a Brain Surgeon Sees the Most Terrifying Diagnosis in Medicine
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • Jenny Erpenbeck’s Kairos has won the 2024 International Booker Prize.
  • What the Shadowy History of Women’s Health Tells Us About Its Uncertain Future
  • Looking for what to watch this weekend? Try your favorite authors’ favorite films.
  • Will They or Won’t They? 7 Great Vacation and Road Trip Rom-Coms For Your TBR Pile
  • Invisible Women: On the Victorian Custom of Cutting Mothers Out of Portraits
  • On Co-Writing, Belonging, and Punishing Your Characters: Eve Gleichman and Laura Blackett in Conversation
  • Asahi Linux Project's OpenGL Support On Apple Silicon Officially Surpasses Apple's
  • Lit Hub Daily: June 14, 2024
  • My Mother Will Live Forever in the Stories of Alice Munro
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  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
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  • How a Young Harriet Tubman Found Solace in Syncretic Religion
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  • Fighting Words: A Tribute to Refaat Alareer
  • And the winner of the 2024 Booker Prize is . . .
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  • Among the Sleuths: Looking for Answers at the Nancy Drew Convention
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  • Lit Hub Weekly: July 22 – 26, 2024
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  • Lit Hub Weekly: November 18 – 22, 2024
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  • Lit Hub Daily: February 26, 2024
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  • 90s Book Club: Sleeping with the Enemy with Chelsea Bieker
  • Between Tragedy and Wit: Andrew Ewell on William Styron’s Classic, Sophie’s Choice
  • Meet the 2024 United States Artists Writing Fellows.
  • Lit Hub Daily: March 6, 2024
  • Lit Hub Weekly: March 18 – March 22, 2024
  • James Ivory Tells His 1940s Queer Coming-of-Age Story
  • The book world’s most bloodstained award was handed out in Toronto last night.
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  • Red Hat (and CIQ) Offer Extend Support for RHEL 7 (and CentOS 7)
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  • Ten World-Spanning New Children’s Books Out in October
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  • Paul Auster has died at age 77.
  • The PEN Awards and World Voices Festival Are on the Brink of Collapse
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  • Here’s the winner of the 2024 American Library in Paris Book Award.
  • Rachel Kushner on Crafting a Philosophical Spy Novel For an Age of Environmental Anxiety
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  • Oliver Sacks! Dante! Queer folktales! 20 new books out today.
  • Lit Hub Weekly: September 9 – 13, 2024
  • Anna Noyes on How Residencies and New Routines Create New Neural Pathways (and Help You Write Better)
  • Leah Hunt-Hendrix and Astra Taylor on Solidarity, Change, and Our Interconnected World
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  • What to read next based on your favorite movie of the year (so far).
  • Blessings
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  • Here’s the winner of the 2024 British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding.
  • Too Little, Too Late: On American Media Executives’ Hypocritical Support of Palestinian Journalists
  • Despite the Chaos of the Presidential Election, There Will Be More Than Enough Books This Fall
  • Lauren Groff on Opening a Bookstore in Florida
  • Oxford University Press USA Guild is protesting the firing of 13 unionized staffers.
  • Here’s the 2024 Booker Prize shortlist.
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
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  • A Letter Supporting Six Honorable Journalists in Northern Gaza
  • Lit Hub Daily: April 23, 2024
  • Busting Genre, in Style: Geoff Dyer on the Joy of Writing “Unpublishable” Books
  • Lit Hub Daily: August 8, 2024
  • Our Burning Era: Reading George Stewart’s Fire in Fire Season
  • A Betrayal of Instinct: What Happens to Human Body When It Stops Eating
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  • Big Lies Need Even Bigger Fact Checking
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  • Opa! It’s All Greek to Me! Subverting the Tropes of Greek Culture in Media
  • Lit Hub Daily: September 11, 2024
  • Archive of the Forgotten: Charles Yu on Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn and The Fortress of Solitude
  • Ten Years Later: Reading Laura van den Berg’s Timeless Classic, The Isle of Youth
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  • Read novelist Lana Bastašić’s blazing response to yet another act of literary censorship.
  • Julia Alvarez on Falling in Love with Writing Again
  • Lit Hub Daily: February 22, 2024
  • Lit Hub Weekly: July 15 – 19, 2024
  • Tracy O’Neill on Searching For Her Birth Mother During a Pandemic
  • Lit Hub Daily: January 18, 2024
  • How Nellie Bly and Other Trailblazing Women Wrote Creative Nonfiction Before It Was a Thing
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  • January’s Best Reviewed Fiction
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  • As Journalists Are Murdered in Gaza Their Counterparts Lose Jobs in America
  • Korean Revolutionary Kim San on Moral Courage in the Face of Imperialist Violence
  • What Mary Renault’s The Last of the Wine Reveals About Athletes, Ancient and Modern
  • Lit Hub Weekly: August 19 – 23, 2024
  • Campus Repression and Remixing Proust (lol): This Week on the Lit Hub Podcast
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  • 100 Tips That May (or May Not) Improve Your Next Novel
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  • Lit Hub Weekly: May 6 – May 10, 2024
  • Tracy O’Neill on Interpretation
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  • I asked ChatGPT to write its own versions of iconic poems, and they are… not great!
  • Lisa Ko: How Writing a Novel is Like Wandering a Flea Market
  • Elizabeth Rush on the Thwaites Glacier
  • How the German State Haphazardly Prosecuted Nazi War Criminals
  • No Human Is An Island: On Fiction As a Way of Connecting Across Difference
  • Linus Torvalds on 'Hilarious' AI Hype
  • Here are the finalists for the 59th Annual Nebula Awards.
  • Finding What Works: Alex DiFrancesco on Transness and Spirituality
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • The Tyranny of the Best-Of List: On Navigating Book Lists with OCD
  • Robert Pinsky! Porochista Khakpour! Rufi Thorpe! 26 new books out today.
  • “She was neither the mother of the bride nor the father of the bride. She was the bride.” Calvin Trillin Issues a Series of Important Corrections
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  • You Too? Kim DeRose on Telling and Retelling Stories of Sexual Assault
  • Bret Anthony Johnson on Creating a Story’s Foundation
  • Lit Hub Daily: June 10, 2024
  • The Issues 2024: Reproductive Rights Are Truly on the Ballot
  • Flukes, Fakes and Statistical Uncertainties: What Happens When Physicists Fail
  • Lit Hub Daily: May 7, 2024
  • Lit Hub Weekly: March 4 – March 8, 2024
  • The Annotated Nightstand: What Isabella Hammad Is Reading Now, and Next
  • Lit Hub Asks: 5 Authors, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers
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  • Lit Hub Daily: May 31, 2024
  • Of Unborn Ghosts and Ancestral Murder; Or, Celebrating the Chaos That Led to Us
  • Linus Torvalds Talks About Rust Adoption and AI
  • Lit Hub Daily: November 20, 2024
  • What Elizabeth Bishop and Marianne Moore Learned From Each Other
  • Why America Is Stuck in a Groundhog Day of Racial Trauma
  • Becky Chambers on the new illustrations for The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet.
  • A 2024 Discussion Whether To Convert The Linux Kernel From C To Modern C++
  • Brothers Grimm! Gilmore Girls! Glory Edim! 18 new books out today.
  • Lit Hub Asks: 5 Authors, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers
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  • Amanda Jones on Banned Librarians
  • “Is It All Over My Face?”: The Story Behind Arthur Russell’s “Amazingly Explicit” Dancefloor Classic
  • “Mean Girls!” Life lessons from Hannah Arendt! 23 new books out today.
  • A new literary start-up wants reading to be sexier.
  • Rumaan Alam on Creating a Fictional World of the One Percent
  • They paved Pemberley and put up a parking lot.
  • Re(re)vision: Laurie Frankel on Throwing Away Half Her Book While Writing It
  • Robert Lowell! W.E.B. Du Bois on WWI! Black spies! 27 books out in paperback this April.
  • A Struggle for Survival: Inside Mexico City’s Illegal Detox Centers
  • Sisterhood of the Traveling Stories: On the Literature of Fictional Sisters
  • Freedom Is a Feast
  • Elif Shafak on the Power of Literature and Being a Writer in the “Age of Angst”
  • What World War I Trench Art Tells Us About Its Creators
  • By Any Other Name
  • Which One of You Sent Me Lonesome Dove in the Mail? Or: Tackling the Great American Western
  • Was Françoise Sagan the original brat?
  • Matthew Salesses on the Possibilities of Climate Fiction
  • What a Young John Muir Learned In the Wisconsin Wilderness
  • A novel from Kelly Link! Billie Holiday! 23 new books out today.
  • Poetry and Painting: Visualizing Verse on the Page and the Canvas
  • Sofia Samatar! Robert Louis Stevenson! Reevaluating Nat Turner! 24 new books out today!
  • “Debris”
  • Lit Hub Daily: November 19, 2024
  • Rust for Linux Maintainer Steps Down in Frustration With 'Nontechnical Nonsense'
  • Here’s the longlist for the 2024 National Book Award for Young People’s Literature.
  • Can Computers Create? A Short History of Mechanized Artistic Ambition
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Helen Fielding on Bridget Jones and the Subtle Art of Diary Keeping
  • In Defense of Being a Slow Novel Writer
  • Na Zhong on Iris Murdoch’s The Bell
  • The Past is a Fairy Tale: On Remembering and Forgetting in Modern Ireland
  • How Football Builds Community and Camaraderie Among Deaf Students
  • “On Similes,” a Poem by Miller Oberman
  • How a Group of Revolutionary Anti-Racist Activists Planned to Fight the Klan in North Carolina
  • Documenting Shifting Landscapes with Kalyanee Mam
  • Elizabeth Roberts Architects: Collected Stories
  • Lit Hub Weekly: February 26 – March 1, 2024
  • The Great Dying: How Mass Extinction Made the Dinosaurs
  • Choreographing Shows and Scenes: What Dance Can Teach Fiction Writers
  • Lorrie Moore on the Importance of Re-Reading
  • In Search of the Mona Lisa of Rum: Finding the World’s Oldest (and Dustiest) Vintage
  • Pine64's Linux-Powered E-Ink Tablet is Making a Return
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  • Lit Hub Daily: July 31, 2024
  • Here’s the shortlist for the 2024 British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding.
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Lit Hub Daily: July 26, 2024
  • Jesus Freaks: On the Free Spirited Evangelicals of the 1970s and 80s
  • Lit Hub Daily: August 21, 2024
  • Nick Romeo on the Profound—and Scary—Influence of Economic Ideas
  • Lit Hub Daily: April 4, 2024
  • What Do You Get When You Cross the Contemporary Novel with Nature Writing?
  • A Better Way to Teach History: On Adapting James Loewen’s “Lies My Teacher Told Me”
  • The pros and cons of dating a writer.
  • The Most Scathing Book Reviews of 2023
  • The Issues 2024: The High Costs of the For-Profit American Healthcare System
  • Sally Wen Mao! Emma Copley Eisenberg! A critical history of swole-ness (yes)! 19 new books out today.
  • Lit Hub Weekly: October 28 – November 1, 2024
  • The Transit of Venus
  • In Praise of Long Conversations in Film
  • Linux Market Share Hits Record High
  • Mark Haddon! Dorothy Parker! Anthony Bourdain! 26 new books out today.
  • 100+ translators call for PEN America to relinquish control of the Heim Fund.
  • Katya Apekina Talks Psychics, Slavic Stories, and Writing as Trance
  • Writers are auctioning signed books to raise money for Gaza’s child amputees.
  • Americans’ confidence in higher education has taken a nosedive.
  • On Ten Iconic Women Writers of Film and Television
  • The 10 Best Formally Inventive Queer Memoirs
  • Generation Franchise: Why Writers Are Forced to Become Brands (and Why That’s Bad)
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  • Here are the winners of the 2024 Silvers-Dudley Prizes for literary and arts journalism.
  • Lit Hub Daily: May 22, 2024
  • Here are the finalists for the 2024 Dayton Literary Peace Prizes.
  • No Slaves, No Masters: What Democracy Meant to Abraham Lincoln
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Continual Self-Revision: Bee Sacks on Coming Out As a Nonbinary Author
  • Lit Hub Daily: October 17, 2024
  • The Systemic Sexual Violence Hidden in Plain Sight During America’s Slave Trade
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  • Double, Double: On the Unsettling Power of Doppelganger Stories
  • “An Apt Metaphor for What the Nation Has Survived.” A Taxonomy of K-Drama Amnesia
  • Dorothy Chan! Erik Larson! Aimee Nezhukumatathil! 20 new books out today.
  • Yorgos Lanthimos on adapting Alasdair Gray’s Poor Things.
  • A new Ocean Vuong novel is coming next summer.
  • Longtime Linux Wireless Developer Passes Away. RIP Larry Finger
  • A Sanctuary Made of Books: Stephen McCauley’s Love Letter to Writing in Libraries
  • Lit Hub Asks: 5 Authors, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers
  • Weaponizing a Word: On Falsely Equating Criticism of Israel With Antisemitism
  • Here are the winners of the 2023 Nebula Awards.
  • Most freelance book critics are making less than minimum wage.
  • Summoning Literary Witches: Intan Paramaditha Rethinks Her Personal Canon
  • Google Extends Linux Kernel Support To Keep Android Devices Secure For Longer
  • Calvin Trillin Issues Some Important Corrections to Recent News Stories
  • Meet the writer who added “lol” to the end of every sentence of In Search of Lost Time.
  • Fires, collisions, and Kurt Russell: The untold history of David Foster Wallace’s cruise ship.
  • Information Overload: How Overthinking Feeds Our Innate Superstitions
  • An Enigma Embodied: On Monica Vitti, Italy’s Muse of Incommunicability
  • Cursed Rats, Doll Dreams, and Latin American Folktales: 10 New Children’s Books to Read in June
  • Karen Solt on Being Gay in the Navy
  • The 10 Best Books for Understanding the Opioid Crisis
  • In Praise of Reading: How Literature Enables Us to Inhabit New Worlds
  • Bookshelves for Your Book Selves: Monica Wood on Why She Organizes Books by Emotion
  • Alice McDermott’s Writing Mantra: “Ah, Fuck Em.”
  • AudioFile’s Best Audiobooks of October
  • Lit Hub Weekly: October 21 – 25, 2024
  • Tehrangeles
  • Lit Hub Daily: May 3, 2024
  • Robin Sloan on Creating an Expansive and Immersive Sci-Fi Universe
  • Linus Torvalds Asks Kernel Devs To Write Better Git Merge Commit Messages
  • Javier Zamora and Susan Kiyo Ito on Writing the Story You Have to Write
  • The Power and Possibility of Play: Why Science Is More Than Just Facts and Equations
  • The Annotated Nightstand: What Mosab Abu Toha Is Reading Now, and Next
  • Sally Franson and Emily Nussbaum on Reality TV
  • “Brilliant, Unquiet Minds.” Remembering the Writers Who Struggled With Their Demons
  • “The Act of Writing is a Haunting Experience.” A Roundtable on Community, Craft, and Ghosts
  • Find your next great read with a few simple—and delightfully weird—questions.
  • The Annotated Nightstand: What Bill Schutt Is Reading Now, and Next
  • J.D. Salinger designed his iconic rainbow corner cover himself.
  • “The Daughters”
  • Jerrod Carmichael on Using Art to (Try to) Solve Life’s Problems
  • Canadian writers call on Scotiabank to divest from Israeli arms manufacturer.
  • A Fleeting Utopia: The Rise and Fall of the “Women’s Hotel” in American Cities
  • Looking After the Books: Remembering Children’s Author Joan Aiken
  • Beyond Resolutions: A Closer Look at “The New Year Poem” as an Act of Resistance
  • Kate Brody on Subverting Genre
  • Lit Hub Daily: July 22, 2024
  • Claire Jiménez on the Hardest Emotion to Write
  • Creativity and Cuervo: On Growing Up in My Family’s Liquor Store
  • How Jacqueline Susann and Jackie Collins Changed the Face of Publishing
  • Language, Love and Visibility: Looking Back on an Immigrant Childhood
  • The Issues 2024: The Fight for Climate Justice
  • Adrian Tomine on Building a Creative Career
  • Witnesses to a Changing World: On the Longevity and Endurance of the Greenland Shark
  • I think about the food in the Redwall books way too often.
  • Intertwined in Madness: On Turning Yourself into a Character in a Novel
  • Who Killed Prestige TV? Toward a “Good Fan” Theory of Television
  • Lit Hub Daily: December 2, 2024
  • Naomi Shihab Nye has won the 2024 Wallace Stevens Award for lifetime achievement.
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • A Broader History of the Labor Movement: This Week on the Lit Hub Podcast
  • “The Dream”
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Inspiration in the Cards: How Tarot Can Help Us Narrativize Our Lives
  • The Narrative Pleasures of Social Discomfort: A Reading List of School Reunion Stories
  • The Linux Kernel Prepares For Rust 1.77 Upgrade
  • Kiley Reid on Why Fiction Isn’t Activism
  • Blackness Beyond America: Shayla Lawson on Global Conceptions of Black Identity
  • AudioFile’s Best Audiobooks of July
  • An Ageist Disease: On Living in Fear of Alzheimer’s
  • Edwidge Danticat on Being Fascinated and Daunted
  • What I learned from binging the Book Club movies.
  • Greg Kroah-Hartman Sees 'Tipping Point' for Rust Drivers in Linux Kernel
  • Linus Torvalds Comments On The Russian Linux Maintainers Being Delisted
  • Autopsies, Necrophiliacs, and Werewolf Pandemics: Puloma Ghosh on Translating Grief into Literary Horror
  • The Woman Who Invented “Dark Fantasy.” How Gertrude Barrows Bennett Popularized the Fantastic
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  • Kaveh Akbar! Anthony Veasna So! Irreverent travel! 24 books out in paperback this December.
  • Deadly Sins and Heavenly Virtues: On the Timeless Duality of Being Human
  • Lit Hub Daily: May 9, 2024
  • Why Television Can Be Our Best Writing Teacher
  • Literary Loops: Mariah Stovall on the Role of Repetition in Music and Fiction
  • Is it the summer of the brat?
  • Here are the 2024/25 National Book Foundation Teacher Fellows.
  • Rebecca Solnit: We, the People, Can Make a Better Future
  • How Texas Prisons Regulate Women’s Knowledge Behind Bars
  • What American Divorces Tell Us About American Marriages
  • A Daughter Becomes a Mother: On Inhabiting Both Roles in Fiction and in Life
  • One great short story to read today: John Cheever’s “The Enormous Radio”
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Karl Marlantes on Chronicling the Early Cold War Years
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Take a peek at a new collection of rare Sylvia Plath ephemera.
  • Linux Variants of Bifrost Trojan Evade Detection via Typosquatting
  • The Third Realm
  • September’s Best Reviewed Fiction
  • Local Outsiders: On Growing Up Black in Appalachia
  • The Language of American Jewishness: On Delmore Schwartz, Grace Paley, and the Duties of Freedom
  • “She’s Bouncing the Ball!” On the Uncanny Way Octopuses Play
  • On the Dangerous Weaponization of Antisemitism Against Pro-Palestine Protests
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • Lit Hub Daily: August 16, 2024
  • How the Weimar Republic’s Hyperinflation Transformed Gender Relations in Germany
  • Lit Hub Daily: July 11, 2024
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Conclave, a Quiet Masterpiece, is the Papal Thriller We’ve Been Waiting For
  • Maira Kalman on Losing a Sister to Forced Separation
  • Falling Hard for The Fall Guy
  • Julie Myerson on Her Immersive New Novel
  • Lost and Found: Why I Almost Quit Journalism (and What Brought Me Back)
  • Am I the Literary Assh*le? Judging Your Bad Bookish Behavior
  • Lit Hub Daily: May 28, 2024
  • Lit Hub Asks: 5 Authors, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers
  • On Poetry as Historical Record, the Legacy of Colonialism, and Depicting Disaster in Verse
  • RISC-V Now Supports Rust In the Linux Kernel
  • Intifada: On Being an Arabic Literature Professor in a Time of Genocide
  • How Japanese Female Photographers Channeled Exclusion Into Experimentation
  • What Writers Can Learn From Adapting Their Own Work for the Screen
  • Telling Everything All at Once: A Conversation with Michael Ondaatje
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Going once, going twice. Literary Agents of Change is having its annual auction!
  • A.I. Chatbot, Will You Be My Friend? Seven Stories of Robot-Human Relationships
  • Joanna Pearson on Writing a Literary Whodunnit
  • Author as Illusionist: William Maxwell on Literary Magic and Refusing to Give Up as a Writer
  • A Subterranean Kinship: Rachel Lyon and Leslie Jamison on Writing Separate But Related Books
  • Lit Hub Weekly: September 23 – 27, 2024
  • On Memory’s Ghosts and the Search for the Perfect Writing Space
  • Suffering, Grace and Redemption: How The Bronx Came to Be
  • Visual Disposability: How Photographic Practice Dehumanizes Black Bodies
  • SUSE Wants a Piece of the AI Cake, Too
  • Emily Raboteau on Mothering and Climate Change
  • Love Lies Bleeding is an Eerie, Electric Body-Horror Thriller
  • What the Toxic Morality of Crowdfunded Healthcare Says About American Society
  • “One Function of the Line Is to Order, Another Is to Cut,” a Poem by Zefyr Lisowski
  • Julia Alvarez! Maggie Nelson! Wrestlemania! 26 new books out today.
  • Mahershala Ali is raising money for a Palestinian poet’s family.
  • Poems of Power and Our Planet: Six Essential Ecopoetry Collections to Read
  • How Candida Royalle Redefined the Role of Women in Porn
  • Should Humanity Pay the Ultimate Price For Its Crimes Against Nature?
  • The Annotated Nightstand: What Julia Alvarez is Reading Now and Next
  • Method Writing: What Novelists Can Learn From Actors About Self-Expression
  • “D,” an Alphabetical Prose Experiment by Sheila Heti
  • A Beastly Love: Chronicling the Transformative Experience of Motherhood on the Page and on the Screen
  • “Portrait of My Mother Studying for Her Citizenship Exam,” a Poem by Eduardo Martínez-Leyva
  • Taylor Swift has announced a new album, entitled The Tortured Poets Department.
  • The Ginny Suite
  • A Children’s Classic Turned Box Office Bomb: Inside the Failed Experiment of Babe: Pig in the City
  • How a Generation of Women and Queer Skateboarders Fought for Visibility and Recognition
  • Jill McCorkle on Nostalgia
  • Lit Hub Daily: November 4, 2024
  • How Lonely Planet Founders Tony and Maureen Wheeler Revolutionized the Way We Travel
  • Lit Hub Daily: October 24, 2024
  • Maja Thomas on the Future of the Book
  • The Nightbitch trailer is here, and it’s even more deranged than you expected.
  • A Quiet Giant: How Indonesia Paved the Way for Liberation Struggles Worldwide
  • Daniel Salaña Paris and Wah-Ming Chang on Pedro Páramo
  • Bell-ends, Pillocks, Numpties, and Sh*tgibbons: Why the Brits Swear Better
  • Antoine Wilson on the Humble Art of Writing
  • The Center for Fiction First Novel Prize has announced its 2024 longlist.
  • The 17 Best Book Covers of July
  • Middle Grade for All Ages: 10 Great Books with Strong Tween Characters
  • Ada Limón on the Comfort of Eternity
  • 10 Queer Books For People With Mommy Issues
  • Lit Hub Daily: June 6, 2024
  • Percival Everett! Téa Obreht! Michael Ondaatje! 25 new books out today.
  • Remembering My Friend and Agent, Richard Parks
  • Inside COVID’s Ground Zero: Wuhan, China Before and After Mass Catastrophe
  • A hot new club lets you embrace your inner theatre kid.
  • How to Win The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest
  • Unruly Writing: On the Problem with the Fragmented Art History Book
  • Here Are the Poetry Books to Read in 2024
  • Want to Write Better? Consider Building Your Own Writing Desk
  • How to Leave the House
  • “But the Ancient Greeks Didn’t *Sound* Irish…” On Capturing Voice in Historical Fiction
  • Linus Torvalds Muses About Maintainer Gray Hairs, Next 'King of Linux'
  • Hundreds of writers and entertainment figures sign letter rejecting Israel boycott.
  • Am I supposed to read all this? On spending time with Jenny Holzer’s word art.
  • Between Agency and Fate: Towards a New Poetics of Illness and Healing
  • Writing Advice, Book Recommendations, and More from the Newest Literary MacArthur Fellows
  • Vacation Mode: On the Literary Relationship Between Travel and Madness
  • Camille Bordas on What Stand-Up Comedy Can Teach Writing Workshops About Growing Thicker Skin
  • Lit Hub Daily: August 12, 2024
  • You Are Being Lied to About Gaza Solidarity Camps by University Presidents, Mainstream Media, and Politicians
  • Here’s the longlist for the 2024 National Book Award for Poetry.
  • Lit Hub Daily: July 15, 2024
  • How Jack London Foresaw the Anti-Democratic Future With The Iron Heel
  • Welcome to the Hyunam-dong Bookshop
  • Paul Celan and the Trans-Tibetan Angel
  • The Problem with Giant Book Preview Lists
  • November’s Best Reviewed Nonfiction
  • “She Is Not Me.” What Reading to Your Children Teaches You About Yourself
  • Blood-Soaked Handkerchiefs and Burnt Dresses: The Lizzie Borden Trial, as Told in a Newspaper of the Time
  • July’s Best Reviewed Fiction
  • White Rat
  • Lit Hub Daily: September 28, 2023
  • Linux Foundation Forms Post-Quantum Cryptography Alliance
  • Barbara Ridley on Centering Marginalized Characters in Your Fiction
  • Lit Hub Daily: December 22, 2023
  • The Annotated Nightstand: What Diane Seuss is Reading Now and Next
  • What the Timelessness of Modern Malaise Reveals About the Human Condition
  • From Dream to Nightmare: On the Deadly Manifestations of Religious Hatred in India
  • One great short story to read today: Joyce Carol Oates’s “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”
  • Linux 6.9 Will Be the First To Top 10 Million Git Objects
  • This Week on the Lit Hub Podcast: Celebrating 20 Years of n+1
  • Gravity and Grace: What Becoming a Nurse Teaches You About Being a Poet
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  • Lit Hub Daily: May 15, 2024
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  • Why Close Reading is An Essential Part of Literary Translation
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  • Lit Hub Weekly: April 8 – April 12, 2024
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  • Season of the Swamp
  • Lit Hub Daily: November 1, 2024
  • Lit Hub Daily: January 5, 2024
  • Here’s the longlist for the 2024 National Book Award for Translated Literature.
  • Emily Witt on Drug Stories
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  • Lit Hub Weekly: January 8-12, 2024
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  • A definitive ranking of Brat Pack movies.
  • Lit Hub Daily: November 13, 2024
  • C Pam Zhang and Safiya Noble have withdrawn as USC commencement speakers.
  • “Exit Muse,” a Poem by Zoë Hitzig
  • Coffee, Booze, Undressing, Deprivation: How Writers Get in the Mood to Write
  • Five Books That Showcase the Fascinating Landscape of European Folklore
  • Joy Williams on the Wild, Lyrical Stories of Brad Watson
  • Jenny Odell on Reading the Rocks
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  • New Gabriel Garcia Marquez! Vinson Cunningham! 23 new books out today.
  • Leonard Cassuto on Taking Care of Your Reader
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  • Linus Torvalds Tactfully Discusses Value of getrandom() Upgrade for Linux vDSO
  • Stories That Astonish and Take Risks: Ten New Children’s Books Out in February
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  • “1937.” a Poem by Frederick Seidel
  • The Issues 2024: Going Deep on the Problem of Income Inequality
  • Lit Hub Daily: August 2, 2024
  • Every Arc Bends Its Radian
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  • Lit Hub Daily: April 29, 2024
  • Adoption, Abortion, Autonomy: On the Literature of Reproductive Rights
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  • The Poet of the Revolution: Read Newly Translated Work by One of Egypt’s Most Prominent Poets, Mostafa Ibrahim
  • Here’s the winner of the 2024 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction.
  • Nora Lange on Writing a Book She Loves
  • Lit Hub Weekly: December 25-29, 2023
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  • Sacrifice and Obedience: Marilynne Robinson on the Timeless Tale of Abraham and Isaac
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  • Writer, Farmer, Literary Misfit: In Memory of the Late Stanley Crawford
  • What to read after watching I Saw the TV Glow.
  • The Social Media Project Humanizing Palestinians Killed By Israel, One Person at a Time
  • A Long, Vital Tradition: Nine Books That Imagine What a Black Utopia Could Be
  • “The Final City.” A Poem by Samer Abu Hawwash, translated by Huda Fakhreddine
  • How Do We Balance the Needs of the Earth With the Needs of Humanity?
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  • Sight and the Sacred: 7 New Poetry Books to Read This April
  • Motherhood and the Moon: On Liminal States of Change and Uncertainty
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • What to read next based on your favorite teen comedy.
  • How Ambivalence About Having Children Can Cause Relationship Turmoil
  • The Rarely Seen Color Photographs of Garry Winogrand
  • Trauma, Transfigured: Pascha Sotolongo on Loneliness, Latin American Lit, and the Fantastic in Fiction and Life
  • Muse as Medium: On the Women Pablo Picasso Remade in His Image
  • Here’s the longlist for the 2024 International Booker Prize.
  • Sonya Kelly on Jean-Dominique Bauby’s The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
  • The Literary Outsider: How Barbara Comyns Wrote Her Way to The Juniper Tree
  • No Perfect Laps, No Perfect Drafts: Jade Song on What Swimming Taught Her About Writing
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  • Microsoft Engineer Sends Rust Linux Kernel Patches For In-Place Module Initialization
  • How a Hidden Corner of the American West Became a Refuge For Outlaws
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  • How to Be Photographed: 12 Tips for Putting Your Best Writerly Face Forward
  • Sofia Samatar on Collage, Literary Community, and the Stunning Loneliness of Publishing
  • Jacke Wilson on William Wordsworth
  • Lit Hub Weekly: June 10 – 14, 2024
  • The Issues 2024: LGBTQ Rights Are in Grave Danger
  • Téa Obreht on How She Found The Morningside
  • Here are all the winners of the 2024 Canadian Writers’ Trust literary prizes.
  • Notes on Camp: Caitlin Cowan on the Joys of Working With Young Writers
  • American Abductions
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  • Journalism as a Front of War: On American Media and the Ideology of the Status Quo
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  • Vampires, Selkies, Familiars, and More! April’s Best Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books
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  • Setting the Tone: How Listening to Music Can Inspire Fiction Writers
  • More Than Just Hair: Thinking About Shiva’s Dreadlocks and Black Bodily Integrity
  • Here’s the shortlist for the 2024 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction.
  • Lit Hub Daily: April 10, 2024
  • Dr. Alan Townsend on Emotion and Science
  • Here’s the shortlist for the 2024 BBC National Short Story Award.
  • RHEL (and Rocky and Alma Linux) 9.4 Released - Plus AI Offerings
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • “Virgula,” a Poem by Sasja Janssen
  • All the books that (probably) radicalized Lindsay Weir.
  • We Live in Uncertain Times… But Haven’t We Always?
  • Lit Hub Daily: February 28, 2024
  • “From the River to the Sea.” A Poem by Samer Abu Hawwash, translated by Huda Fakhreddine
  • Lola Milholland on the Housing Crisis and Communal Living
  • Jacqueline Woodson on Navigating Book Bans and Staying Resilient in 2025
  • The Extinction of Irena Rey
  • On the Missed Crimean Connection Between Leo Tolstoy and Florence Nightingale
  • How a Microsoft Update Broke VS Code Editor on Ubuntu
  • Rumaan Alam! Gay Shakespeare! How Elon Musk killed Twitter! 26 new books out today.
  • Lit Hub Daily: March 8, 2024
  • What Fiction Can Reveal About the Fragile Fabric of Our Societies
  • Service
  • Amitava Kumar on the Importance of Being an Amateur
  • Lit Hub Daily: February 15, 2024
  • Frederik X’s first(ish) act as King of Denmark? Publishing a book about himself.
  • Five cultural hubs to follow for Hurricane Helene updates.
  • Writing Away the Angel in My Bedroom: On OCD
  • How the Violence of Partition Forged National Identity in South Asia
  • The Poetry of the World’s First Cookbook: What Cooking Can Teach Writers and Translators
  • Lit Hub Daily: September 26, 2024
  • Earth is about to get a second moon… but what will it mean for the lit world?
  • Experiencing Place in Fiction: On Allowing Your Characters to Get Lost
  • What Illness Can—and Cannot—Tell Us About Ourselves
  • Lit Hub Daily: September 3, 2024
  • Greg Sarris on Writing to Remember Our Responsibility To Each Other
  • Here’s the longlist for the 2024 National Book Award for Nonfiction.
  • The Best Books for Understanding the Far Right “Constitutional Sheriff” Movement
  • It’s time to add horror and romance to the Best American roster.
  • The Avian Hourglass
  • Joshua Mohr on Writing a Genre-Blending Post-Modern Punk Rock Saga
  • Withdrawals and protests are roiling the PEN America Literary Awards.
  • AMD Proposes An FPGA Subsystem User-Space Interface For Linux
  • New literary podcasts to add to your queue.
  • Paul W. Downs and Lucia Aniello on Comedy Partnership
  • In the Beginning… Why Every Novel Needs an Origin Story
  • “New Words for the Truth of Still Being Alive.” Poetry by Herbert Gold and His Son, Ari
  • The (un)Lonely Reader: On the Pleasure of Finding Community in a Book
  • Expanding Words, Worlds, and Permissions to Be: Five Powerful Trans Memoirs
  • A New Asian American Boom: A Reading List of the Cambodian American Experience
  • Timothy Schaffert on the Literary Parallels for the House GOP Clusterf*ck
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  • We Were Cyborgs: On the Construction of the Self As a Teenage Girl
  • Lit Hub Daily: June 27, 2024
  • Capturing Moments of Growth and Loss: Photography as an Excavation of the Self
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  • 17 Novels You Need to Read This Fall
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  • Lit Hub Daily: August 6, 2024
  • The Joys and Fears of Trans Motherhood
  • Lit Hub Daily: March 19, 2024
  • When Indie Publishing Meets Corporate Bookselling
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  • In Service: Writers on Making Ends Meet in the Service Industry
  • Double Vision: How the McLaughlin Sisters Took the Photography World By Storm
  • Watch the first trailer for the upcoming adaptation of Interior Chinatown.
  • The Winner
  • Yes, But Can You Really Explain the Difference Between Morals and Ethics?
  • Lit Hub Weekly: January 2-5, 2024
  • Keanu Reeves and China Mieville co-wrote a novel! Noam Chomsky! 19 new books out today.
  • Speak/Stop
  • Yiyun Li on Georges Bernanos’ Mouchette
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  • A Room of One’s Own: On Finding Beauty and Inspiration in Meditation
  • How Geraldine Stutz Personified the Mid-Century Professional Woman
  • Mark Haber on the Beauty of Digression
  • Alan Minskoff on Why He Loves Audiobooks
  • Against spring cleaning: The books the Lit Hub staff just can’t let go of.
  • Our Founding Mothers: On the Women Who Changed the Modern World
  • Lit Hub Daily: January 16, 2024
  • 'Damn Small Linux' is Back - But Bigger
  • Meet the writers who garden against time.
  • Here are this year’s literary MacArthur Fellows.
  • Linus Torvalds Growing Frustrated By Buggy Hardware, Theoretical CPU Attacks
  • A Book Club of Two: The Time I Started a James Joyce Reading Group in College
  • Natalie Goldberg on the Real Equipment of a Writer
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  • Punished for Pregnancy: On the Radical Power of The Millstone by Margaret Drabble in a Post-Roe World
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • “Happy New Year,” a Poem by Lisa Olstein
  • “YouTube Comments on My Marriage,” a Poem by Cristine Brache
  • Hari Kunzru! Freud! System of a Down (the memoir)! 26 new books out today.
  • Contemporary Poets Respond (in Verse) to Taylor Swift
  • We Need Your Help: Support Lit Hub, Become a Member
  • Lit Hub Daily: October 1, 2024
  • Javier Zamora on Strategies for Writing About Childhood Trauma
  • 22 new books out today!
  • Lit Hub Daily: March 20, 2024
  • Jeff Sharlet on ‘Sanewashing’ and Fascism
  • Escaping Genocide: Diary of a Life in Gaza
  • Temim Fruchter on Writing to Resist Repression
  • Libraries rule, cops drool: Today’s the birthday of both NYC’s libraries and police.
  • Colm Tóibín on James Baldwin’s Enduring, International Influence
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  • For philosophy newbs: five thinkers to follow today.
  • Read the opening lines of Sally Rooney’s next novel.
  • Ava Nathaniel Winter on Poetic Embodiment, Queerness in Judaism, and Finding Art in the Disturbing
  • 90s Book Club: The Vacuum Vagina with Ryan Bradford
  • Writing Between Worlds: Navigating My African and American Identities on the Page
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  • Six Writers on Getting Words on the Page
  • Lit Hub Daily: February 12, 2024
  • Seven Unexpectedly Intimate Poetry Books to Read in March
  • Lisa Leshne and Kathleen Schmidt Offer Publishing Advice From the Trenches
  • One great short story to read today: Helen Oyeyemi’s “Books and Roses”
  • “Remembrances”
  • Lit Hub Weekly: November 25 – 29, 2024
  • Balancing the Books: Five Novels that Explore the Complexities of the Stock Market
  • Brief Essays on Altered Sight: On Braille, Loss, and Blindness’ Many Forms
  • Lit Hub Daily: September 4, 2024
  • What the Science of Memory Can (and Can’t) Reveal about Truth in Memoir
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  • Time-Slips and Body Hopping: Eight Great Novels of Time Travel
  • In Tongues
  • Nazem Kadri on Becoming a Brown Muslim Hockey Star in a Very White Sport
  • Jan Carson on Capturing the Failures of Northern Ireland in Fiction
  • The Women’s Prize for Fiction has announced their 2024 shortlist.
  • Mycelial Landscapes with Merlin Sheldrake and Barney Steel
  • “The Houses of Your Village Have Eyes.” A Poem by Irma Pineda, in Three Languages
  • Roberto Bolaño’s bank heist plan involves five poets.
  • Elizabeth Strout! Jerald Walker! Seamus Heaney’s letters! 28 new books out today.
  • Here are the finalists for the 2024 Aspen Words Literary Prize.
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • Lifting the Curse of Luigi da Porto: On the Life and Legacy of a 15th-Century Italian Poet
  • “OTAKNAM”
  • An Eye On the Court: Chronicling 40 Years of NBA Photography
  • No Safe Place to Grieve: The Trauma of Muslim Americans Living Under Surveillance
  • Making Space for Palestinian Happiness
  • Lit Hub Weekly: March 11 – March 15, 2024
  • Where are they now? Catching up with your favorite children’s book protagonists.
  • Center yourself with some springtime affirmations for book lovers.
  • How The Prophet Made Kahlil Gibran a Household Name in America
  • Lit Hub Daily: June 20, 2024
  • Lit Hub Daily: August 1, 2024
  • How New York City Became a Haven For Endangered Languages
  • Linux Kernel 4.14 Reaches End of Life After More Than Six Years of Maintenance
  • Richard Powers on Chronicling Our Relationship With Nature and Technology
  • Appealing Art for Young Readers: 10 New Children’s Books Out in January
  • These are the bestselling (new) books of 2023.
  • Find TNR’s bookmobile to donate banned books at the Brooklyn Book Festival this weekend!
  • “La Doppelgänger,” a poem by Saúl Hernández
  • “relativity,” a poem by Danez Smith
  • “It’s Harder for Me to Talk About Them.” Percival Everett on the Paintings He Makes
  • Earth, Head, and Heart: Six Deeply Researched Eco-Memoirs
  • Lit Hub Daily: September 18, 2024
  • Here are the bookies’ odds for the 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature.
  • Here are the finalists for the NYPL’s 2024 Young Lions Fiction Award.
  • Jacke Wilson on Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • Paul Giamatti, This One’s For You: In Praise of the King of Pathos
  • Why Did Taffy Brodesser-Akner Go to a Psychic to Fix Her Writer’s Block?
  • “The Girl Who Became a Rabbit,” a Poem by Emilie Menzel
  • The New York Times’ “Best Books of the Century” List Was an Unforgivable Erasure of African Literature
  • Happy Birthday, Duke Ellington: Here Are 15 Great Books About Jazz
  • An Overdue Reckoning: How Sweden Continues to Deny Its Settler-Colonial Past
  • Lit Hub Daily: January 11, 2024
  • 100 of the Greatest Posters of Celebrities Urging You to Read
  • “Your Utopia”
  • Brooklyn Public Library’s Leigh Hurwitz on Helping Young People Resist Censorship
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • Chef Eric Ripert on Keeping Seafood Simple
  • A new Mosab Abu Toha poetry collection is coming this fall.
  • Listen to a Future Fable from Stephen Graham Jones: “The Three Golden Nails”
  • One great short story to read today: Donald Barthelme’s “The School”
  • Postpartum Publishing: On the Highs and Lows of Bringing a Book Into the World
  • I read the government graphic novels Elon Musk thinks are a waste of money.
  • Jen Hadfield on Annie Dillard’s Pilgrim at Tinker Creek
  • Survival of the Wealthiest: Joseph E. Stiglitz on the Dangerous Failures of Neoliberalism
  • Oliver Sacks Letters to Thom Gunn: Inside an Epistolary Friendship
  • The Annotated Nightstand: What Zoë Bossiere Is Reading Now, and Next
  • A Bag Full of Trouble: How I Found My Way Into My Debut Novel
  • Dragon Heists and Choose-Your-Own-Futures: July’s Best Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books
  • What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
  • Unapologetically Free: A Personal Declaration of Independence From the Formerly Enslaved
  • How Does That Make You Feel, Magda Eklund?
  • Winning the Culture War Against Queer Kids’ Books
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  • Nikole Hannah-Jones Reflects on the Most Important Historical Project of Our Generation
  • We have a dangerous blur: Philip K. Dick’s cult essay about false realities is as relevant as ever.
  • Lit Hub Daily: March 27, 2024
  • Jodi Picoult on the Importance of Recognition
  • Demons, Bog Wives, and Seven-Eyed Dragons: October’s Best Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books
  • Who Made Who? On the Creative Collaboration of Man Ray and Kiki de Montparnasse
  • Rachel Khong on the Power and Potential of Not Knowing
  • One great short story to read today: Jamaica Kincaid’s “Girl”
  • On the Time Benjamin Franklin, American Show-Off, Jumped Naked Into the Thames
  • How I Booted Linux On an Intel 4004 from 1971
  • Searching For Agnes Martin
  • Erica Berry on the Polyamorous Intimacy of Reader, Author, and Audiobook Narrator
  • Somaia Abu Nada Remembers Her Slain Sister, Heba Abu Nada, Palestinian Poet and Novelist
  • What Is Left? Rebecca Solnit on the Perennial Divisions of the American Left
  • A Riveting, Timeless Journey Through the Afterlife: Inside the World of Dante’s Divine Comedy
  • Colm Tóibín! Geraldine Brooks! A guide to killing time! 19 books out in paperback this January.
  • Here’s the shortlist for the 2024 American Library in Paris Book Award.
  • Lit Hub Daily: February 9, 2024
  • The Ultimate Summer 2024 Reading List
  • Lit Hub Weekly: September 16 – 20, 2024
  • Lit Hub Daily: June 24, 2024
  • How Foreign Tyrants Contract American Lobbyists to Whitewash Their Crimes
  • As Much Power As the President: How Billionaires Became More Influential than World Leaders
  • Lit Hub Daily: August 5, 2024
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Unlocking Reason: How the Deaf Created Their Own System of Communication
  • “If you read this and can hear me…” New Poetry by Fady Joudah
  • What the Epic of Gilgamesh Reveals About Sumerian Society
  • Writer, Woman, Playwright, Spy: How Espionage Influenced Aphra Behn’s Writing
  • Lit Hub Daily: November 30, 2023
  • Naomi Klein, Isabella Hammad, Maaza Mengiste and More Have Withdrawn From the PEN World Voices Festival
  • How a Legacy of Poverty and Systematic Exclusion Created “White Trash” in America
  • Love the World Or Get Killed Trying
  • How Walmart’s Business Model Encourages Gender Discrimination
  • Here are the shortlists for the 2024 National Translation Awards in poetry and prose.
  • Alissa Quart on the Dangerous Lie of American Bootstrap Narratives
  • August’s Best Reviewed Fiction
  • Lit Hub’s 38 Favorite Books of 2024
  • Ukraine honors its own Tortured Poets Department.
  • How Do We Celebrate Arab American Heritage Month During a Genocide?
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
  • Lit Hub Daily: September 25, 2024
  • “To Become a Poet is to Step Into the Void.” Ilya Kaminsky on Slovenian Poet Tomaž Šalamun
  • Never get stranded without a novel again with this map of 6,000 bookstores.
  • Am I the Literary Asshole: Do You Have to Finish a Book to Blurb It?
  • Ananda Lima on Conquering Pre-Publication Anxiety With Crafting
  • Lit Hub Daily: February 16, 2024
  • Lit Hub Weekly: August 26 – 30, 2024
  • This year’s Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction goes to Richard Flanagan.
  • An open letter from North American scholars condemns the “scholasticide” in Gaza.
  • Pink Slime
  • The spiciest takeaways from Tina Brown’s Vanity Fair Diaries.
  • Zachary Pace on the Push and Pull of Working in Publishing as a Writer
  • What Greenland’s Melting Ice Tells Us About the History and Future of Global Warming
  • You’ve Got Mail: Poring Over the Love Letters of Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Browning
  • All The Songs We Cannot Hear: On the Challenges of a Life Without Sound
  • A Short Walk Through a Wide World
  • Lit Hub Daily: October 2, 2024
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
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  • Six newsletters to get you through this week.
  • “Tunnel Vision.” A Poem by Peter Mishler
  • James Baldwin and the Roots of Black-Palestinian Solidarity
  • Bedtime Tales, Upheavals, and Ecopoetry: Seven New Poetry Collections to Read This October
  • Lit Hub Daily: April 17, 2024
  • Words of No Syllables: How Animals Bond With Their Human Caretakers
  • What Virginia Woolf’s “Dreadnought Hoax” Tells Us About Ourselves
  • Jeffrey Eugenides on Colm Tóibín, “The Kindest Person in the World”
  • What Freudian Psychoanalysis Gets Wrong About Trans Identity
  • Six Writers on Procrastination
  • Freedom and Responsibility: Why Earth’s Survival Depends on All of Us
  • What to Read Before and After Seeing How to Come Alive With Norman Mailer
  • John Kaag on the Bloods, the Little-Known Dynasty that Shaped American Life and Philosophy
  • Some of Our Favorite Poetry Collections of the Year
  • Duty of Care: Tomas Moniz on Trauma, Healing and Houseplants
  • Why you should get excited about the new Blood Meridian adaptation.
  • Paper Trail: On the Cross-Cultural Evolution of the Notebook
  • Marko Milovanovic and Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee on Time
  • An abridged timeline of Gatsby adaptations.
  • Spiders, Climate Change, and Wind: Ten Great New Children’s Books Out in March
  • Watch novelist Susan Abulhawa’s harrowing dispatch from Gaza.
  • More Than a Muse: On Salvadoran Artist and Wife of Antoine, Consuelo de Saint-Exupéry
  • “Notice to Appear,” a Poem by Leslie Sainz
  • Margot Livesey on the Importance of Rhythm
  • Colorism, Code-Switching, and Shapeshifting: Readings on Biracial Identity
  • Returning to the Scene: What’s Left of Café Loup, Legendary NYC Literary Haunt?
  • Saying the Unsayable, and Listening to Silence: Jon Fosse on How Writing Plays Transformed His Craft
  • Lev Grossman on Adapting Arthurian Legends For a World in Turmoil
  • Mourning a Breast
  • How Game Theory Can Help Organ Donors Find Their Match
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  • Ilyon Woo and Rachel Kousser on the Power of a Writing Partnership
  • Seeing Green: Why We Should All Be Paying Attention to Plants
  • Kathleen DuVal has won the 2024 Cundill History Prize.
  • “The Belfast Pogrom: Some Observations,” a Poem by Paul Muldoon
  • Timothy Snyder on How the Collapse of the Soviet Union Took America By Surprise
  • 1979’s The Book-Store Book documents a lost borough of booksellers.
  • Lit Hub Daily: July 3, 2024
  • The View From Kyiv: How Ukraine Confronted the Looming Threat of War
  • Lit Hub Daily: July 12, 2024
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  • Haruki Murakami! Sondheim! Parks and Rec! 23 new books out today.
  • Colson Whitehead has withdrawn as a 2024 commencement speaker. Who will be next?
  • Israeli forces have burned down the library of Al-Kalima.
  • “Small But Unforgettable Moments.” What E.B. White Loved About New York City
  • Have you purchased a weirdly low-quality paperback book lately? This may be why.
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  • Pilsner Goes to America: How Beer Got Big in the 19th Century
  • In Search of the Moomins in Helsinki: The Enduring Magic of Tove Jannson’s Characters
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  • On Small Business Saturday, Consider the Small Press
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  • Stacey D’Erasmo on the Art of Intimacy
  • Richard Serra’s “Verb List” is both art and to-do list.
  • On the Environmental and Philosophical Factors Behind Literary Creation
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  • Leslie Jamison! Michiko Kakutani! The wildness of Old English! 23 new books out today.
  • 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
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  • The Issues 2024: Why the Labor Movement is So Important to Americans
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